Alice Aycock
Untitled (Shanty)
1978
Not on view
Date
1978
Classification
Sculpture
Medium
Wood
Dimensions
Overall: 107 3/4 × 107 3/4 × 48 1/2in. (273.7 × 273.7 × 123.2 cm)
Accession number
84.71.1a-d
Credit line
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; gift of Raymond J. Learsy
Rights and reproductions
© Alice Aycock
In Untitled (Shanty), Alice Aycock transforms a common building type into an object of mystery that transcends the original function of its architecture. She elevates the vernacular architectural structure (quite literally) on splayed stilts and frames it within a wooden ring, toward which it reaches with ladder-like wooden arms. The materials and construction methods suggest practical use, but the building has no function; the open door invites entry, but the shanty is too small for human habitation. The configuration, moreover, evokes a number of different iconic images: a five-pointed star, a Tantric circle, and Leonardo da Vinci’s Vitruvian man–an ideally proportioned man with outstretched limbs touching the contour of the perfect circle. Although one foot of the sculpture seems planted in Renaissance humanism and the other in Eastern mysticism, the plainspoken materials are rooted in the Pennsylvania farm where Aycock grew up.